Generous offer, Frank. I will keep the offer visible to tap when specifications call out.
Bob, my guess is that very many different wings will be built to fit the polite-city-busable call. Many build centers across the world may generate the wings. Gradually some results will be more pleasant than others. I am aiming to build along several schemes. The first soon-to-be wing will necessarily follow some certain scheme. The momentum of the build will feed the next wing; the tooling and habits will bring on second and third and ... iterations within various schemes will produce next wings more readily. Dedicating space and investments in tools and skills grows to an accumulative impact that will generate many wings over many schemes.
First scheme unfolding for me will not be a hack over an extant wing. Per engineer MacCready of aviation-world fame to his sons: learn while doing; such will help form follow-on wings.
First scheme this month and next couple of months will be single-spar of splinted airbeam (case-and-bladder),
rigged X control frame,
wires-not-cantilevered,
"wires" will be soft,
One full-span spar of 30 ft.
some taper to the wings,
high hat HH,
spar will have two compression elements segmented and coupled (holding off on coiling for later plays) (one zenithal for anti-buckling from lift loads. One aft at about at about 3 o'clock for anti-buckling from drag loads), The segments will be at most 5 ft long; sliding couplers are anticipated. Compression element segments are permanently bonded to spar case. Soft hinging in five places will occur for pack.
Airfoil will accept the spar's inflated leading edge shape. Live with its resultants!
one aft at about at about 3 o'clock for anti-buckling from drag loads),
set of batten ribs seated on compression-elements featuring stand-offs and tensed camber-making bow strings,
separated mainsail zippered to spar,
set of rib-support struts rooted at spar and set to batten ribs (with some going beyond upwards to form foundation for outboard aft fins.
The slightly tapered left and right spars will give a slight sweep.
No bowsprit. Aim is to depend on the splinted spar and aft-spar compression element to resist drag.
The X control frame will be tensed to keel from above and below.
Rigging will be draggy; will explore loose line streamlining to see if there is any noticeable gain.
Pitch safety will arrive from rib-support strut seating, TE reflex treatment, HH.
HH will allow quick experiments over choices of HH wings above the main wings.
Rigging outboard will be to points on the surface of the spars' most leading point and also to spars' most aft point of mid-side-wing station.
This morning's batten ribs attracting build are flat until perma-two-rooted strings (PTRS) are stressed with small stand-offs. Packing will see the flat straight battens; flight will see camber formed from the family of PTRS.
Bladder will be from first-arriving material among TPU, PVC, PET. PET will not be satisfactory. Best would be the TPU. I will be trying many materials.
Spar case will be pinched and sewn at tips. One spar, not two. Two would have the challenge of unequal inflation air pressures, not wanted.
Center-span region design is still not settled. Spar at keel closed using bulbous fabric cap will invite airfoil healing via hook-and-loop applique marrying left and right. But rigid caps for keel end of the airbeams might allow easy bolting and integration of the X control frame. Iterations here are expected.
Soft lines will use stubby knot-ended shorts at connection points; then loop-loop with pigtails for larksheads will finish rigging. I will enjoy the assembly and disassembly of the lines at flying site ---- no hurry. Line segments will be soft carried during tote. No stainless steel; no Nicopress sleeving. Tlabel is for the top end of the X frame. L is for left side. R is for right side. s is for spar-attach point. a is for aft of spar. f is for front of spar. k is for aft of keel. B is for bottom tip of X frame. Lines: ZRsf, ZLsa; ZRsa, ZLsa; BRsf, BLsf; BRsa, BLsa; ZRk, ZLk; BRBL, ZRZL. The BRBL is the axis for HH. The ZRZL is the base-line in control from to be sleeved for grip.
Spar diameter inflated may go to 14 in and taper to 8 in. Such may give 3 in of sweep as seen from the projected sideview. Unloaded dihedral resultant would also be 3 in. Aeroelastic resultants upon loading will be interesting!
Pack: 5 ft tall. Handy on other dimensions; perhaps two-part luggage.
Site assembly: DRAFT PROCEDURE is surely not complete:
Open accordioned six-section integrated one spar of 30-ft span.
Slide into place five compression-element couplers for top compression element; so same for aft compression element five couplers.
Zipper mainsail to spars.
Seat flat ribs to spar beneath mainsail.
Place keel to spar and keel rib and mainsail TE.
Seat flat ribs to TE of mainsail.
Inflate spar. Measure air pressure.
Set rib struts to spar and flat ribs.
Place ribs' camber-making standoffs.
Place fins: L, R, K.
Tie downs set.
Place X and rig X. Place HH airfoil on its line before setting final end of ZRZL.
Connect all lines.
Place hang loop.
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Do system check. Test. Observe. Be ready for surprises and anomalies.
Check air pressure before each flight.
Hook-in.
Fly. Be thankful. Share information and joy of flying.
Observe results. Make notes. Improve systems.
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Make changes to system.
Build other wings. Compare wings.
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Others may show up at Dockweiler or other sites with 5-ft pack solutions or 4-ft or 3-ft solutions ....